Style Guide for Re-purposing Your Old Content
One of the first questions that people ask when they are setting up a blog for their website is, “Where do I get content?” The answer is often right in front of their faces, in the form of their existing press releases, brochures, and other printed materials. Mequoda.com has published an excellent style article for turning this printed content into a blog post or page. I am going to elaborate on some of their points:
Titling, categorization and tagging rules for online publishing with Wordpress blogs
When publishers pull apart their archived content and start putting it up on their blog, they have a variety of style options to choose from when posting.
We recommend taking a little extra time to optimize your old articles (whether they are evergreen or not) in order to make that content as valuable to your blog (and audience) as possible.
The following style guide for unleashing your print archives into a blog is specific to Wordpress in terms of folksonomy, but can be applied to any type of blogging platform.
Rule #1: Include at least one primary or secondary keyword phrase in your blog titles and subhead.
Why? Because blog titles are so specific, you might choose to use a secondary keyword in your title (like “repurposed content” in the case of this article) and a primary in your subhead (like “online publishing”). If you want to get ranked on a keyword in search engines (and you do), this is your prime real estate to display them.
Keywords are very important, and the search engines parse your posts looking for the most important words in the text. It is important to highlight them. Which leads to:
Rule #2: Make sure your blog is set up to define your title and subhead in H tags.
Why? H1, H2 and H3 are highly regarded by Google as defining what a page is “about”.
In your “writing page” in WordPress there is a button in the menu bar titled “Paragraph”. In the drop-down menu you will see Heading 2 and Heading 3. I recommend that you use Heading 2 no more than once per page, and Heading 3 for your sub-headings. Edit your CSS to make these headings “pop”.
NOTE: Never use H1 in your content! That tag is reserved for the title of the page and you will be penalized by the search engines.
Examples:
This is H2/Heading 2
This is H3/Heading 3
Rule #4: Assign posts to a single category.
Why? From testing, it’s become abundantly clear that assigning single categories to articles boosts ranking on the category title. Hopefully your categories (or topics) are named as keywords that you want to be ranked on. This can also avoid duplicate content.
You should also keep in mind that your blog should have a few, very focused categories. If you write about cars, for example,you might use categories like Sedan, Coupe, Convertible, then use Tags for more specific topics like Corvette, BMW, and so on.
This is really great information for people that are looking to optimize their online content, and for more information like this, including audio and video with step-by-step instructions and real-life examples, see Writing for the Web, Inside and Out, by myself and Brad Shorr.
- Category: Business Development | Tagged: ,blogging tools, branding, business tactics, info-products, marketing, real-world examples, social media strategy
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